Former Senior UN
Official: UNRWA Must Shape Up or Ship Out
Breaking Israel News
Latest News Biblical perspective
By JNS October 7, 2019 , 11:14 am
And they said,
“Come, let us build us a city, and a tower with its top in the sky, to make a
name for ourselves; else we shall be scattered all over the world.” Genesis
11:4
A Palestinian boy rides his bicycle past the closed
offices of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) during a strike
in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip. (Credit: Abed Rahim Khatib/Flash90)
https://www.breakingisraelnews.com/138193/former-senior-un-official-unrwa-must-shape-up-or-ship-out/
“Direct pressure” by donors is the most likely way to
induce the United Nations Relief and Works Agency to change, former UNRWA
general counsel James Lindsay told JNS as the 74th session of the U.N. General
Assembly came to a close last week in New York.
Former UNRWA general counsel James Lindsay speaks on a
U.N. Watch-sponsored panel in Geneva on Sept. 23, 2019. Source: Screenshot.
Speaking from Geneva, Lindsay—the only former senior
UNRWA official ever to have written a thorough critique of the agency, which is
tasked with serving 5.6 million Palestinian refugees in the West Bank, Gaza,
eastern Jerusalem, Syria, Lebanon and Jordan—told JNS that while the renewal of
the agency’s mandate in the coming months was “pretty much a foregone
conclusion,” donor countries can still have a very significant impact. (The
agency’s mandate must be renewed every three years.)
Donors countries should be encouraged to do “the right
thing,” he said, by “pressure and embarrassment,” if necessary.
As Palestinian and Jordanian ministers met on the
sidelines of the General Assembly meeting to try to ensure a renewal of the
agency’s mandate, Lindsay exposed various structural problems with UNRWA that
go beyond alleged abuses of authority by senior agency officials. (UNRWA is
currently under investigation by U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres
following accusations of ethical misconduct and corruption.)
Speaking at a side event at the 42nd session of the U.N.
Human Rights Council on Sept. 23, Lindsay critiqued the notoriously anti-Israel
agency, suggesting that it must evolve or dissolve. Lindsay detailed UNRWA’s
undermining of its own mission as a “humanitarian and welfare organization
focused on the immediate relief of people in distress.”
For example, he said, only 10 percent of the
organization’s current budget goes to basic, immediate needs, while the rest
goes to education and medical care, which he called “governmental
responsibilities.”
“There is no reason why the United Nations should be
providing that,” he said.
UNRWA’s major structural problem, he said, is its unique
definition of who qualifies as a refugee. According to the agency’s definition,
Palestinians who have citizenship in their host countries, including 1.8
million Jordanian citizens, are still classified as refugees. This is unlike
the definition used by the U.N. Human Rights Council, which is responsible for
all other refugees around the world.
“We must address this definition and make it consistent
with other definitions,” he said, which would require a “transfer of [various]
responsibilities from UNRWA to Jordan.”
“From a practical standpoint,” Lindsay told JNS, “I
suspect all member states already know that the UNRWA definition of a refugee
should, from a moral and legal standpoint, be made identical to the definition
for all other refugees in the world.”
Even so, he said, “UNRWA persists in falsely identifying
people who are citizens of states as ‘refugees,’ perpetuating a sense of
helplessness, victimhood and revanchism” among these Palestinians.
“By not demanding that UNRWA adopt the United Nations’
convention definition, the General Assembly has elevated politics over
morality,” said Lindsay.
Moreover, he said that the failure of UNRWA, which he
maintained “is really the failure of its donors,” to resolve the Palestinian
refugee problem, is an impediment to peace, reinforcing the belief in a “right
of return” among Palestinians—a “right” that he called “anathema to Israelis.”
‘In their mind, the war is not over’
Also speaking on Sept. 23, in the plenary of the Human
Rights Council, former Knesset member Einat Wilf similarly spoke out against
UNRWA, saying that the Palestinians had “hijacked” the organization after
refusing to accept the outcome of the 1948 war that led to the creation of the
State of Israel.
“The core issue is that in their mind, the war is not
over. In their mind, the State of Israel is temporary,” she said. “If they view
Israel as temporary, they will never sign an agreement that will bring peace.
They will wait it out.”
Wilf, too, put the onus on Western donor states, “whose
definition of peace is two states,” but who continue to “funnel money into this
organization that makes [Palestinian refugees] think otherwise,” thereby
“fueling and legitimizing the idea that a Jewish state is temporary.”
Since 2009, Lindsay said, the only donor state to take
action against UNRWA was the United States, with U.S. President Donald Trump
withdrawing America’s annual $360 million in funding to the organization. This,
said Lindsay, “forced other states to fund UNRWA and highlighted UNRWA’s
continuing use of its own, wholly inappropriate, criteria for determining who
is a refugee.”
He expressed his “cautious optimism” that with new
attitudes and pressure from the U.S. government, European governments and
politicians may also begin to increase the difficulty in fully funding its operations.
Lindsay called on additional UNRWA donors to push for these “rational changes”
to the definition of a refugee, or push to dissolve the organization over the
next five years.
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